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The TianQin project: current progress on science and technology

Authors :
Mei, Jianwei
Bai, Yan-Zheng
Bao, Jiahui
Barausse, Enrico
Cai, Lin
Canuto, Enrico
Cao, Bin
Chen, Wei-Ming
Chen, Yu
Ding, Yan-Wei
Duan, Hui-Zong
Fan, Huimin
Feng, Wen-Fan
Fu, Honglin
Gao, Qing
Gao, TianQuan
Gong, Yungui
Gou, Xingyu
Gu, Chao-Zheng
Gu, De-Feng
He, Zi-Qi
Hendry, Martin
Hong, Wei
Hu, Xin-Chun
Hu, Yi-Ming
Hu, Yuexin
Huang, Shun-Jia
Huang, Xiang-Qing
Jiang, Qinghua
Jiang, Yuan-Ze
Jiang, Yun
Jiang, Zhen
Jin, Hong-Ming
Korol, Valeriya
Li, Hong-Yin
Li, Ming
Li, Pengcheng
Li, Rongwang
Li, Yuqiang
Li, Zhu
Li, Zhulian
Li, Zhu-Xi
Liang, Yu-Rong
Liang, Zheng-Cheng
Liao, Fang-Jie
Liu, Shuai
Liu, Yan-Chong
Liu, Li
Liu, Pei-Bo
Liu, Xuhui
Liu, Yuan
Lu, Xiong-Fei
Lu, Yang
Lu, Ze-Huang
Luo, Yan
Luo, Zhi-Cai
Milyukov, Vadim
Ming, Min
Pi, Xiaoyu
Qin, Chenggang
Qu, Shao-Bo
Sesana, Alberto
Shao, Chenggang
Shi, Changfu
Su, Wei
Tan, Ding-Yin
Tan, Yujie
Tan, Zhuangbin
Tu, Liang-Cheng
Wang, Bin
Wang, Cheng-Rui
Wang, Fengbin
Wang, Guan-Fang
Wang, Haitian
Wang, Jian
Wang, Lijiao
Wang, Panpan
Wang, Xudong
Wang, Yan
Wang, Yi-Fan
Wei, Ran
Wu, Shu-Chao
Xiao, Chun-Yu
Xu, Xiao-Shi
Xue, Chao
Yang, Fang-Chao
Yang, Liang
Yang, Ming-Lin
Yang, Shan-Qing
Ye, Bobing
Yeh, Hsien-Chi
Yu, Shenghua
Zhai, Dongsheng
Zhang, Caishi
Zhang, Haitao
Zhang, Jian-dong
Zhang, Jie
Zhang, Lihua
Zhang, Xin
Zhang, Xuefeng
Zhou, Hao
Zhou, Ming-Yue
Zhou, Ze-Bing
Zhu, Dong-Dong
Zi, Tie-Guang
Luo, Jun
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

TianQin is a planned space-based gravitational wave (GW) observatory consisting of three earth orbiting satellites with an orbital radius of about $10^5~{\rm km}$. The satellites will form a equilateral triangle constellation the plane of which is nearly perpendicular to the ecliptic plane. TianQin aims to detect GWs between $10^{-4}~{\rm Hz}$ and $1~{\rm Hz}$ that can be generated by a wide variety of important astrophysical and cosmological sources, including the inspiral of Galactic ultra-compact binaries, the inspiral of stellar-mass black hole binaries, extreme mass ratio inspirals, the merger of massive black hole binaries, and possibly the energetic processes in the very early universe or exotic sources such as cosmic strings. In order to start science operations around 2035, a roadmap called the 0123 plan is being used to bring the key technologies of TianQin to maturity, supported by the construction of a series of research facilities on the ground. Two major projects of the 0123 plan are being carried out. In this process, the team has created a new generation $17~{\rm cm}$ single-body hollow corner-cube retro-reflector which has been launched with the QueQiao satellite on 21 May 2018; a new laser ranging station equipped with a $1.2~{\rm m}$ telescope has been constructed and the station has successfully ranged to all the five retro-reflectors on the Moon; and the TianQin-1 experimental satellite has been launched on 20 December 2019 and the first round result shows that the satellite has exceeded all of its mission requirements.<br />Comment: 16 pages, 1 figure, invited article to a special section in PTEP

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2008.10332
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ptep/ptaa114